A
asi9
New member
Had a thought the other day when using my ears.....
Ya know, I've always hated that 'gritty' sound when micing amps with a SM57, and the other day I did what engineers suggest and raised my amp so that get right next to my speaker to find the 'sweet spot' of the sound. I closed off one ear so that I would be hearing "mono", and put my other ear up to the speaker. You know what I found out? It sounded TOTALLY different... when I face the amp directly and play, it has a very pretty, full tone (even up close), but as soon as I turned my head to where my ear was facing straight at the amp, the sound got a really gritty, dirty sound that is exactly what I DON'T like about my guitar tone when we record, I always thought it was just the SM57's "sound"! Why is it that I love the sound I get when looking straight at the amp, but hate the sound I my head is turned and one of my ears is pointing straight at the speaker? And how can I mic and record the amp to get that same sound I hear when I'm looking straight at the amp? Turn the mic perpendicular to the amp rather than facing straight at it? Do I need to cut off some cartilage and put it on the mic?
Ya know, I've always hated that 'gritty' sound when micing amps with a SM57, and the other day I did what engineers suggest and raised my amp so that get right next to my speaker to find the 'sweet spot' of the sound. I closed off one ear so that I would be hearing "mono", and put my other ear up to the speaker. You know what I found out? It sounded TOTALLY different... when I face the amp directly and play, it has a very pretty, full tone (even up close), but as soon as I turned my head to where my ear was facing straight at the amp, the sound got a really gritty, dirty sound that is exactly what I DON'T like about my guitar tone when we record, I always thought it was just the SM57's "sound"! Why is it that I love the sound I get when looking straight at the amp, but hate the sound I my head is turned and one of my ears is pointing straight at the speaker? And how can I mic and record the amp to get that same sound I hear when I'm looking straight at the amp? Turn the mic perpendicular to the amp rather than facing straight at it? Do I need to cut off some cartilage and put it on the mic?
